How To Find Lost Objects (1993-2008)
How To Find Lost Objects (1993-2008)
How To Find Lost Objects (1993-2008)
http://www.professorsolomon.com
How to Find Copyright © 1993, 2008 by Top Hat Press
All rights reserved
Lost Objects
Drawings by Steve Solomon
by Professor Solomon Photographs by Brad Fowler and Leonard Solomon
The author thanks Larry Callahan and Elizabeth Minter
for their assistance.
ISBN 0912509058
http://www.professorsolomon.com
Top Hat Press
BALTIMORE
PRINCIPLE NINE: Look Once, Look Well .........................28
Table
PRINCIPLE TWELVE: It Wasn’t You ....................................34
Quiz..............................................................................35
One More Principle........................................................38
of
Contents
3.
1.
The Way to Search
Betsy Finds Her Keys .....................................................42
A Method That Works
This Book’s for You .........................................................3
The Facts ........................................................................5
4.
Getting Started................................................................7
The Art of Finding
At My Door..................................................................66
2. How to Proceed ............................................................69
Ten Tips........................................................................71
The Twelve Principles....................................................10
The Bermuda Triangle Myth .........................................79
5.
This and That
Some Quotes................................................................101
Missing Luggage..........................................................102
How Not to Lose Things ..............................................103
The Last Place.............................................................104
A Consumer’s Guide to Detection Devices ...................105
Alternative Methods....................................................109
Saint Anthony ..............................................................112
Hashevat Aveida ...........................................................114
1.
A Zen Koan...................................................................115
Wannamoho.................................................................116
A Method
A Final Word ...............................................................122
That Works
CERTIFICATE ...................................................................124
“Sir, how did you find that elusive checkbook?”
This Book’s For You
“Why, simple,” he replies with a modest smile. “By
applying the Twelve Principles.”
You’ve lost your car keys, and are about to lose your “The Twelve Principles?”
mind.
“That’s right. As outlined in HOW TO FIND LOST OBJECTS
You’ve looked everywhere—have torn your house by Professor Solomon.”
apart—but can’t find those keys.
And he continues on his way—while you are about
Your day has ground to a halt. Your life is on hold. to resume the frantic hunt for your keys.
A glazed look has come into your eye. You’re going
nuts! But…maybe it’s time that you, too, checked out
those Twelve Principles.
All because of a missing set of keys.
Maybe you’re ready, after all these years, to become
rummage through room after room. Half an hour
later, they still haven’t turned up. You throw your If you think you might be—if you’re seriously inter
Finally, you check your pocket. For the keys? No,
for the bus fare you’re going to need to get to work.
It’s come to that.
Talk about feeling foolish.
Meanwhile, your neighbor has mislaid his check
book.
Less than a minute later, he has found it, and is
coolly walking out his front door.
How did he do it? How did he avoid the frustra
tion—the inconvenience—the loss of time—so
often caused by misplaced objects?
Let’s ask him.
3 4
Yes, lost objects can be found.
The Facts
How is it done?
By following my method.
Young and old, rich and poor, city folks and farm
ers—we’re all constantly losing things. Interested?
It’s an ageold problem—as old as the pyramids. Read on.
And one that’s not about to go away.
Every day millions of objects are misplaced in the
United States. Among them are wallets, rings, keys,
scissors, sweaters, notebooks, eyeglasses, theatre
tickets, important documents—you name it. (A
circus elephant is said to have been lost recently in
Florida!) Many of these objects are never recovered
—possibly a billion dollars’ worth annually. (Their
sentimental value, of course, is incalculable.) Even
more disturbing is the time spent looking for such
objects. The average person could spend up to two
months of his life searching—often fruitlessly—for
things he has lost.
Then there’s the “nuisance factor” associated with
missing objects. The cars that can’t be started. The
books that can’t be read. The business that can’t be
conducted. Millions of Americans experience such
frustrations daily. It is something that touches each
of our lives, and that can make a nightmare of an
ordinary day—that can drive us to distraction!
But the incredible fact is this:
Each and every one of those objects—the tickets, the
eyeglasses, the elephant—could have been found.
Easily. Within minutes.
5 6
tions that seem particularly relevant to your own
Getting Started
misplacement profile.
Then, the next time you lose something, open this
My method is unique, amazing, and easy to learn. book and make the Twelve Principles work for you.
It is based on what I call the Twelve Principles—a I can almost guarantee they will.
lost object. Like a bloodhound!
Let’s learn how to find lost objects.
I, too, was constantly being mocked by misplaced
keys, books, manuscripts, pajama tops. My cap would
vanish. My pen would hide from me. The list was
endless.
But then I realized that lost objects can be found.
If the search is conducted systematically, and mind
ful of a few basic ideas.
It wasn’t long before I was finding my things with
an ease that seemed miraculous. Yet no psychic
powers, expensive equipment, or special skills were
involved. Simply a method. I also began to help
friends find their lost items. Astounded at the
results, they urged me to write this book.
You’ll be astounded, too, as missing objects virtu
ally line up to be found!
I recommend that you start by reading the book
through from beginning to end. Introduce yourself
to the Principles. Follow Betsy as she searches for
her keys—the wrong way and the right way. Get a
feel for my tips and techniques. And mark any sec
7
8
The Twelve Principles
My method is based on the Twelve Principles—a set
of fundamental guidelines for finding lost objects.
The Twelve Principles are:
1. Don’t Look for It
2. It’s Not Lost—You Are
3. Remember the Three C’s
2. 4. It’s Where It’s Supposed to Be
5. Domestic Drift
The 6. You’re Looking Right at It
7. The Camouflage Effect
Principles 8. Think Back
9. Look Once, Look Well
10. The Eureka Zone
11. Tail Thyself
12. It Wasn’t You
These Principles are the core of my method. So get
acquainted with them. Learn them. Master them.
Then, whenever something can’t be found, simply
apply the Principles.
So…let’s get right into them.
10
PRINCIPLE ONE
Don’t Look for It
Something’s lost, and your first thought—your basic
instinct—is to look for it. You’re ready to start rum
maging about. To hunt for it in a random, and
increasingly frenetic, fashion. To ransack your own
house.
This is the most common mistake people make.
And it can doom their search from the start.
I know you’re eager to find that lost item. But not
yet. Don’t look for it yet.
Wait until you have some idea where to look.
12
PRINCIPLE TWO
It’s Not Lost—You Are
14
PRINCIPLE THREE
Remember the Three C’s
To find a lost object, you must be in the proper
frame of mind. And that means paying attention to
the Three C’s.
They are:
COMFORT
Start by making yourself comfortable in an arm
chair or sofa. Have a cup of tea, perhaps, or a stick
of gum.
CALMNESS
Next, empty your mind of any unsettling thoughts.
Pretend that the sea is lapping at your feet. Or that
you’re sitting in a garden full of birds and flowers.
CONFIDENCE
Finally, tell yourself you will locate that missing
object. (To enhance your confidence, you might want
to don a thinking cap. See instructions on how to
make one.)
Now you’re ready. To begin a systematic search.
16
PRINCIPLE FOUR
It’s Where It’s Supposed to Be
Believe it or not, things are often right where they’re
supposed to be.
Is there a place where your missing object is nor
mally kept? A particular rack, or shelf, or drawer?
If so, look there first. You may actually have hung
up your coat last night. Or put the dictionary back
on the shelf. Or returned the tape measure to the
tool drawer.
Even if you didn’t, someone may have done it for
you.
18
PRINCIPLE FIVE
Domestic Drift
Many objects do have a designated or customary
place where they are kept. But the reality is that
they aren’t always returned there. Instead, they are
left wherever last used.
Such objects have undergone Domestic Drift. They
could be anywhere in the house, or out in the yard.
Relax. Get comfortable. Pour yourself a cup of cof
fee.
Now try to remember. Where were you last using
that pliers, or tape measure, or fountain pen? Where
did you last have it?
Because that’s precisely where it still may be.
20
PRINCIPLE SIX
You’re Looking Right at It
All right. You checked where it’s supposed to be,
where it was last used, or where it might have been
casually tossed. And it wasn’t there.
Or…was it?
It is possible to look directly at a missing object and
not see it. This is due to the agitated state of mind
that often accompanies a misplacement. Go back
and look again. It may be staring you in the face.
Occasionally, our distress is such that not only do
we overlook an object—we forget what we’re look
ing for! To avoid this, repeatedly murmur the name
of the object. (“Potholder, potholder, potholder.”)
But why the agitation? Have we forgotten the sec
ond C? Return to your armchair and get calm.
22
PRINCIPLE SEVEN
The Camouflage Effect
Don’t be fooled. Your object may be right where
you thought it was—but it has become hidden from
view. Be sure to check under anything that could
be covering your object, having inadvertently been
placed on top of it.
I call this the Camouflage Effect. Among the most
common offenders are newspapers and sombreros.
24
PRINCIPLE EIGHT
Think Back
You were there at the scene of the misplacement.
You were there when the object was put down—
was left in an obscure location—was consigned to
oblivion.
You were there—because you did it!
So you must have a memory—however faint—of
where this happened.
Are you prepared to think back, and retrieve that
memory?
If so, you may soon be crying out “Of course!” and
making a beeline to that forgotten place.
26
PRINCIPLE NINE
Look Once, Look Well
Don’t go around in circles. Once you’ve checked a
site, don’t go back and check again. No matter how
promising a site—if the object wasn’t there the first
time, it won’t be there the second.
Assuming, of course, that your first check was
thorough.
28
PRINCIPLE TEN
The Eureka Zone
The majority of lost objects are right where you fig
ure—once you take a moment to stop and figure.
Others, however, are in the immediate vicinity of that
place. They have undergone a displacement—a shift
in location that, although minor, has served to ren
der them invisible.
Some examples:
A pencil has rolled beneath a typewriter.
A tool has been shoved to the rear of a drawer.
A book on a shelf has gotten lodged behind other
books.
A folder has been misfiled, several folders away from
where it belongs.
Objects are apt to wander. I have found, though,
that they tend to travel no more than eighteen inches
from their original location. To the circle described
by this eighteeninch radius I have given a name. I
call it the Eureka Zone.
With the aid of a ruler (or a EurekaStik—see
later), determine the Eureka Zone of your lost
object. Then explore it. Meticulously.
30
PRINCIPLE ELEVEN
Tail Thyself
If you still haven’t found your object, it may be time
to Recreate the Crime.
Remove your thinking cap and don your detective’s
cap. For you are about to follow your own trail.
Let’s create a typical scenario. You come home from
work and find a letter in the mail. Some time later
you’re ready to read it…but it’s missing. You’re per
turbed and perplexed. Where’s that letter?
Okay, start at the door and retrace your steps since
returning home. Where in the house did you go?
To what specific locations? Stop at each of them and
look for the letter.
Hmm, a coat thrown across a chair. You were here.
(Check under the coat and in its pockets.)
A depression in the sofa. You were here.
On the kitchen counter, a glass. You were here.
On the table by the armchair, candy wrappers and
a novel. You were here.
And marking your place in the novel—aha! That
missing letter.
Good work, gumshoe.
32
PRINCIPLE TWELVE
It Wasn’t You
When all else has failed, explore the possibility that
your object hasn’t been misplaced. Rather, it’s been
misappropriated.
Perhaps someone you know has borrowed your
umbrella. Or eaten your doughnut. Or taken your
magazine into another room.
Approach that person and inquire if such might
not be the case. (“Have you by any chance seen
my…?” is a tactful way to phrase this.)
34
8. There are twelve months in the year, twelve members of
Quiz a jury, twelve signs of the zodiac, and Nine Principles for
finding lost objects.
true false
Let’s see if you have mastered the Principles. Check
true or false to each of the following statements: When you have completed the quiz, turn the page.
1. If you misplace something, search your entire house for
it. Do so in a frenzied, unsystematic fashion. Do not use
the Twelve Principles.
true false
2. Never check under a sombrero for a missing object.
true false
3. The Three C’s are Confusion, Consternation, and Dis
comfort.
true false
4. The Eureka Zone is a mountainous area of the Yukon, in
which gold was discovered in 1848.
true false
5. Poltergeists, gremlins, and other supernatural beings are
responsible for the majority of lost objects.
true false
6. Domestic Drift is a term used by bureaucrats, to refer to
houses that float off during a flood.
true false
7. A misplaced elephant cannot be found.
true false
35 36
One More Principle
The following principle is a special one.
I call it the THIRTEENTH PRINCIPLE. And I have kept it
apart from the others to underscore its use in a
certain dire situation only.
The situation is this: You’ve applied each of the Twelve
Principles, and still haven’t found your object.
That should rarely happen. But when it does, you
have a recourse—the THIRTEENTH PRINCIPLE.
Okay, turn the page and take a look.
If you answered false to each of the eight
questions, congratulations! You have mastered
the Twelve Principles. Welcome to the ranks of
those who locate what they lose.
37 38
THE THIRTEENTH
PRINCIPLE
Qué Será, Será
Have you been applying the Principles? If so, you
should have found your object by now.
But occasionally, Fate chooses to separate us from
one of our possessions. When that seems to be the
case, it’s time to call off the search.
Your missing object may eventually turn up. Until
then, accept that you are being offered a lesson: in
patience…or humility…or nonattachment to the
things of this world.
And if not, so what? Lost keys, books, eyeglasses—
even elephants!—can be replaced. Such losses are
inconvenient and vexing. Yet surely they have their
place in the inscrutable economy of the Universe.
You’ve done what you can. So relax, and—with a
shrug of resignation—accept the fate of your object.
Qué será, será. What will be, will be.
40
Betsy Finds Her Keys
Let’s follow Betsy as she conducts a search—first
the wrong way, then the right way!
●
3.
The Way
to Search
A few days later, she is about to leave for work, “They must be in here,” she mutters, and empties
when…she can’t find her keys. her briefcase on the floor.
43 44
Nope. She looks everywhere.
45 46
47 48
49 50
“Urghh!” She’s going nuts.
51 52
It’s Professor Solomon, taking a stroll.
53 54
“Of course,” says Betsy. “I forgot all about his method. She begins by applying the 3 C’s.
The Twelve Principles! My keys aren’t lost, I am.”
55 56
Then it’s Tail Thyself. Betsy closes in on those elusive keys.
57 58
Determining her Eureka Zone. Exploring it.
59 60
Eureka! She’s mighty pleased.
61 62
And it’s off to work. “Next time,” says Betsy, “I’ll try the Twelve Prin
ciples first.”
63 64
At My Door
People show up at my door, tell me they’ve lost this
or that vital possession, and plead with me to help
them find it.
I ask them: “What was the first thing you did when
you realized it was missing?”
They shrug and reply: “I looked around the house
for it.”
4. “I thought so,” I say, shaking my head sadly. “Well,
you committed the Basic Blunder. Never ‘look around’
The Art for a lost object.”
That throws them for a loop. They stare at me and
of Finding mutter: “Don’t look around for it?”
“You heard me.”
“Then what am I supposed to do?”
“Follow me and I’ll show you.”
comfortable in a lawn chair.
objects.”
“But you’re just sitting there.”
“Not at all. I’m hard at work.”
“That’s work?”
“Indeed it is. I’m trying to find your lost object.”
“You are? But how?”
“By applying the Three C’s: Comfort, Calmness,
66
and Confidence. By the way, what size head do you
have? We’ll want to make you a thinking cap.”
At this point, many grow dubious and leave. I never
see them again. Others decide to stick around and
learn my method.
If you’ve come this far in the book, you’re obviously
among the latter. You’ve mastered the Twelve Prin
ciples, and are ready now for a comprehensive look
at the art of finding.
The sections that follow will deal with a variety of
lostobject situations. Study these sections. Become
familiar with the ins and outs of finding. Get a
practical sense of what it’s all about.
Then, the next time you lose something, you
should be able to find it with ease. It will be as if a
67 68
Instead, he is cool and collected. He sits and ponders,
How to Proceed
like a poet lost in reverie. He listens—to memories,
brainstorms, hunches. And he searches with con
fidence.
How should you go about using my method? What
specific steps should you take, in order to recover But most of all, he applies the Principles.
your object? How exactly is a search to be conduct If you proceed as I have outlined, you should have
ed? no trouble in tracking down your object.
There’s no one answer to that. Finding is an art;
and every Finder develops a style—an approach—
a modus operandi—of his own. Moreover, every
misplacement is unique, and must be solved in an
ad hoc fashion. But basically, here’s what I tell
people:
Sit down, make yourself comfortable, take a deep
breath or two…and ponder. Ask yourself: Where is
that object? In what obvious place? Try to recall or
figure out its whereabouts. And the most effective
means of doing that? The Twelve Principles, of
course. Simply go through them, one by one, and
see where they lead you. (If you haven’t yet memo
rized the Principles, position my book in front of
you. It’s been designed to lie flat, open to a partic
ular Principle while you sip coffee, think, scratch
your head, reread the Principle, stare off into space,
sigh, rack your brains, etc.)
When a possible location pops into mind, go check
it out. If it’s a dud, return to your seat and continue
as above.
Remember, your frame of mind during this process
is critical. Anxiety, selfreproach, haste—a Finder
will have nothing to do with such Defeat Factors.
69
70
4.
Ten Tips
Are you one of those people who like to sprawl on
the sofa? And your wallet—which you carry in a
1.
pants pocket—is missing? Maybe it fell out on the
sofa. Go look.
One of the most common recovery areas for lost
objects is the automobile. Your object may simply It should be noted that dropping things is not the
be lying on the car seat, where you left it. Or it may same as misplacing them: no lapse of memory is
have become wedged between cushions, or have involved. So if a set of keys has fallen from your
fallen on the floor. If you were traveling in an auto pocket, or an earring from your ear, most of the
mobile, check these places. (And remember, check Principles will not be relevant. One that will be,
thoroughly. A cursory examination can be disas however, is “Tail Thyself.” Simply follow your trail
trous—as will be explained in “Common Mistakes about the house, closely examining the floor, stairs,
to Beware.”) seat cushions, etc.
2.
5.
Instead of being where it’s supposed to be, your To reduce the likelihood of a misplacement, and to
object may be where something else is supposed to facilitate any searches that become necessary, keep
be. What happened was a mental lapse, in which your home neat and orderly. Remember the maxim:
A PLACE FOR EVERYTHING AND EVERYTHING IN ITS PLACE.
one routine motion got substituted for another. For
example, your scissors are normally kept in a jar on
the kitchen counter; but mindlessly, you returned
them to the tool drawer. 6.
If a loss is thought to have occurred outside the
home, sit down and review your movements dur
3.
ing the day. Then telephone around, to see whether
What were you wearing when you last remember the item has been found. If it’s a wallet, bag, or
having the object? Think back, then go search the briefcase that may have been left in a store, have
pockets of those clothes. And be meticulous—search them check near the cash register: while paying,
every pocket. The one you skip could be the one you may have put it down, then left it behind. Or
you’re after. if you dropped something, a good Samaritan may
71 72
have found it and left it with the cashier. In the case
of institutions—schools, community centers, the
9.
atres—ask if they have a lostandfound. As you sit and ponder the whereabouts of a lost
object, your state of mind should be like that of a
Should this phone search prove fruitless (or not be
daydreamer: relaxed and contemplative. But when
feasible), leave the house and return to the loca
you get up to go check a site, shift gears. Be alert,
tions you visited during the day. At each of them
energetic, and thorough—you’re a detective now.
retrace your steps—keeping a sharp eye out for the
object.
But remember: neither of the above should be re
sorted to prematurely. First search your house—
10.
8.
Be sure you’re not looking for a phantom posses
sion: something you had planned to purchase but
then never did. (Or something you acquired in a
dream.)
73 74
The Maniacal Search
Common Mistakes
Our misplacement throws us into a frenzy; and like
a wild man we search the entire house. We stalk
to Beware
about, rifling through drawers, emptying boxes,
turning things inside out—and utterly neglecting
I see the same mistakes being made, again and again, the Twelve Principles.
in connection with lost objects. Among them are: Maniacal searches are undignified and exhausting.
Worse yet, they tend to fail: an agitated eye will pass
The Panicky Presumption right over its quarry.
Pity the poor soul who goes through wastebaskets Apply the Principles!
or garbage bags—or even races to the town dump!
—in search of something that’s right where it’s sup
posed to be. Mistaken Image of an Object
I once helped a friend search his bookshelves for
a particular book. He had described it to me as
The Rash Accusation a hardback. So that’s what we looked for—at
“Who’s got my coffee mug?” (or stapler or newspa length and in vain. Finally, I grew suspicious of
per or elephant) we demand, after only a superficial his description, and began to examine the paper
search. A rash accusation—in what will probably backs as well. And there it was, in plain sight. Our
prove a case of mere misplacement. false image of the book had prevented us from
finding it.
Wild Goose Chase Suspicion
We are about to search our house for an object. Yet
we suspect that it’s not in the house, and that we
are embarking on a Wild Goose Chase.
So we search halfheartedly—causing us to over
look the object. Which convinces us that it’s not in
the house.
75 76
Initial Discouragement
immediately into the search. (Don’t go off and survey other
rooms, lest you fail to return to this one—a Quick Look
We’ve misplaced some tiny item—a pill, say, or a after all!)
screw—and it could be anywhere in the house. We
consider not even attempting a search. “I’m not go
ing to find it,” we murmur. “That darn thing’s gone
forever.”
No! Say instead: “It is here somewhere, and I shall
succeed in finding it. Why? Because I’ve got the
Twelve Principles. Principles that work.” Quick Look
The Quick Look
As we sit and ponder the whereabouts of an object,
a number of possible sites come to mind. So we
take a Quick Look—a mere glance—into those
nearest at hand. The idea is to move on to more
promising sites. These initial ones, we tell our
selves, can always be returned to for a closer inspec Cool Onceover
tion.
A harmless expedient? Not if it results in an over
looked object. For we may misremember those initial
sites as having been closely inspected, and never
return to them.
NOTE: The Quick Look is not to be confused with the Cool
Onceover. The Cool Onceover is a legitimate shortcut,
and should precede any meticulous search. It works like
this:
You suspect an object to be somewhere in a particular room,
and are about to search that room. Before doing so, give it
a general survey—an alert roving of the eye—a Cool Once
over. Your object may be sitting in plain sight. If so, you
will spot it and avoid a meticulous search. If not, move
77
78
The TreasureTrove Syndrome
The Bermuda
We hide some valuables in a distinctive place—a
location so unique that it will be sure to stick in our
Triangle Myth
memory.
Oh yeah?
Can our possessions drop off the face of the earth?
Is there a mysterious region into which they van They’re still there.
ish, never to be seen again? Do supernatural forces
or beings cause the disappearance of some objects? RingORuption
We are making a household repair, when the tele
phone rings. Rushing to answer it, we drop the tool
we were using on the first surface that presents
itself.
It’s still there.
Pocket Gobble
Absentmindedly, we slip something into one of
our pockets.
It’s still there.
79 80
The Hands Full Situation
LoanOLoss
Returning home with groceries, dry cleaning, and We loan something to a friend, then forget that we
briefcase, we find our hands full. So in order to did so.
unlock the door, we set down one of those items. She’s still got it.
“Just for a second.”
●
It’s still there.
The mind wants to believe that things mysteriously
Be Right Back disappear—that they are spirited away by super
natural forces or beings. But (except for that pilfer
A variation of the above. Rather than set something ing leprechaun), it just isn’t so. Most lost objects are
down, we struggle to unlock the door—then leave somewhere near at hand…waiting to be found.
the keys in the lock, intending to return immedi
ately and fetch them. Your task is to find them.
They’re still there.
81 82
The Sly Approach
Step 2
Step 1
83 84
How to Make a
Thinking Cap
A thinking cap can boost your confidence, and focus
your mental energies. Here’s how to make one.
5. Fold the lower corners to 6. Fold the flap up over
1. Take a folded sheet the bottom of the band. the band.
of newspaper and
locate its centerline.
Fold the upper cor
ners down to meet
the centerline.
7. Fold the top of the flap 8. Fold the peak of the
down into the band. cap down to the bottom
of the band. Tuck it in.
2. Fold the top sheet up
3. Fold it up again to
to meet the base of
create the band of
the triangle.
the cap.
4. Turn the cap over and
fold the right and left
edges so that they
meet at the centerline.
(For a largesize cap,
let them fall an inch
9. Open the cap and flatten 10. Don the cap…and
short of the center its top. Fold the pointed you’re ready to think.
line.) ends down into the band.
85 86
.........................................................................................................................................................
Eureka!
In Principle Ten we learned about the Eureka Zone
—that limited area in which displaced objects tend
to be found. It was described as a circle whose cen
ter is the original location of the object, and whose
17
EurekaStik
radius is eighteen inches.
There’s a convenient way to determine your Eureka
Zone; and that’s by using a EurekaStik. They’re
easy to make—all you need is an ordinary ruler, the
attachment on the next page, scissors, and tape.
16
Start by cutting out the attachment. Then:
1. Fold along dotted line.
2. Fold tab A over tab B. A B
3. Tape them together.
15
4. Slide attachment onto end of ruler.
5. Tape it there.
And lo, a EurekaStik. Align its zero mark with the
spot from which the object is suspected of having
14
been displaced. Now rotate the arrow (see Figure 1).
The circle described is your Eureka Zone.
Inspect every inch of that Zone—every nook and
cranny. Check under and behind things. And don’t
13
12
Figure 1
87
be fooled by vertical displacement—check the floor,
too. (See note.)
Remember, your EurekaStik can be helpful, but it’s
The Purloined Letter
89
90
attempting to conceal it at all.” Instead, the man
had left it in plain sight, crumpled up as if unim The Game’s Afoot
portant and thrust carelessly into a rack.
In “The Man with the Twisted Lip,” Sherlock Holmes
And there the police ignored it. After all, the letter is engaged to locate a husband who has mysteri
they were seeking would have been carefully pre ously disappeared. Watson gives this description of
served and tucked away in some secret place. Holmes solving the case:
Had Dupin been familiar with the Twelve Princi A large and comfortable doublebedded room had
ples, he might have told the redfaced gendarmes: been placed at our disposal, and I was quickly between
“Messieurs, you were looking right at it.” the sheets, for I was weary after my night of adventure.
Sherlock Holmes was a man, however, who, when he
had an unsolved problem upon his mind, would go for
days, and even for a week, without rest, turning it
over, rearranging his facts, looking at it from every
point of view until he had either fathomed it or con
vinced himself that his data were insufficient. It was
soon evident to me that he was now preparing for an
allnight sitting. He took off his coat and waistcoat,
put on a large blue dressinggown, and then wandered
about the room collecting pillows from his bed and
cushions from the sofa and armchairs. With these he
constructed a sort of Eastern divan, upon which he
perched himself crosslegged, with an ounce of shag
tobacco and a box of matches laid out in front of him.
In the dim light of the lamp, I saw him sitting there,
an old briar pipe between his lips, his eyes fixed
vacantly upon the ceiling, the blue smoke curling up
from him, silent, motionless, with the light shining
upon his strongset aquiline features. So he sat as I
dropped off to sleep, and so he sat when a sudden ejac
ulation caused me to wake up, and I found the sum
mer sun shining into the apartment. The pipe was still
between his lips, the smoke still curling upward, and
the room was full of a dense tobacco haze, but nothing
remained of the heap of shag which I had seen upon
the previous night.
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92
“Awake, Watson?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Game for a morning drive?”
Freud’s Fee
“Certainly.”
“Then dress....” He chuckled to himself as he spoke,
According to Freud, objects may be intentionally
his eyes twinkled, and he seemed a different man to
misplaced. We want to forget where we left them.
the somber thinker of the previous night.
We want to overlook them.
What better example of someone applying the Three InThe Psychopathology of Everyday Life, he describes
C’s—Comfort, Calmness, and Confidence—as he “the unconscious dexterity with which an object
begins a hunt! is mislaid on account of hidden but powerful
motives.” These motives involve “the low estima
tion in which the lost object is held, or a secret
antipathy towards it or towards the person that it
came from.”
Freud tells of a patient who could not find the keys
to his desk, despite a painstaking search of his
apartment. Sensing that the loss was intentional—
a “symptomatic act”—the patient had his servant
take up the search. The servant found the keys.
The patient then delved into his unconscious. Why,
he wondered, had he been unable to locate the keys?
What had been his secret motive? Could it relate some
how to his treatment session with Freud, scheduled
for the following day?
Suddenly, it dawned on him. Their loss had pre
vented a certain drawer from being opened—the
drawer in which the money for his treatment was
kept. His motive for losing the keys? Secret rage, he
realized, at having to pay Freud so high a fee!
If you suspect your own misplacement to be inten
tional, have a friend join in the search.
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94
Hrönir
A True Account
In his story “Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius,” Jorge The following letter is from Larry Callahan, an artist
Luis Borges tells of a world where (among other in Southern California, whom I had introduced to
marvels) lost objects duplicate themselves. Thus, a the Twelve Principles:
searcher may come upon the object itself—or may
Dear Professor Solomon,
have found its duplicate. Known as hrönir, these
duplicates are usually mistaken for the object. They I had an experience recently that involved your method.
ly larger than the original, and will possess some to the airport to pick one up. I had some errands to
run—letters to mail at the post office, and checks to
imperfection of form. deposit at my bank—so I decided to do it all in a sin
There are also hrönir that barely resemble the ob gle trip. I placed the letters and checks together in one
ject that engendered them. Instead, they fulfill the pile (aware that this was reckless, but trusting myself
to separate them at the appropriate moment), grabbed
searcher’s desires in regard to that object. For exam my car keys, and set out.
ple, he loses a pencil…and finds a fountain pen. My first stop was the post office, where I deposited the
In the real world, hrönir shouldn’t be a problem. letters in a curbside mailbox. Then I picked up my
But do take care to search for the actual object— friend and proceeded to the airport.
not (as in my search for the supposedly hardcover At the rental agency he went inside, while I waited to
book) an idealized image of it. make sure there was no problem. As I sat in my car, I
noticed an accumulation of trash on the floor. Why
not put these idle minutes to use, I said to myself, and
do some car cleaning? So I gathered up the trash—
bags, fliers, newspapers, and whatnot—and dropped
it into a receptacle outside the agency.
My friend emerged with a set of keys and a rental con
tract. I said goodbye and drove off, headed now for my
bank.
At the bank I parked and looked about for those checks.
They were nowhere to be seen. Frowning, I checked
my pockets. I peered into the glove compartment. I
poked about on the floor and under the seat. All to no
avail. The checks had disappeared.
I tried not to panic. My anxiety level was rising,
95
96
though—when I recalled your method. The Twelve
I racked my brains. Where else could they be? Think
Principles, I murmured. Why not give them a try?
back.
The first that came to mind was “Don’t look for it.”
I thought back…and saw myself gathering up that
moved on to “The three C’s”—adjusting the seat to
O no. The checks must have fallen on the floor, and
get comfortable, taking deep breaths to calm myself,
been in with the trash.
and telling myself that the checks had to be SOME
WHERE.
“That’s it!” I cried. “They’re in the trash can!”
Next came “You’re looking right at it.” I was? The checks
I described this new theory to the postal employees.They
were right in front of me? I glared at an empty dash
began to look at me funny. Bidding them a hasty fare
board.
well, I dashed to my car and drove back to the airport.
Then I remembered the Principle about thinking back.
At the rental agency I got out of my car and eyed the
So I thought back, trying to picture what I had done
trash receptacle. I removed its lid and looked in.
TOGETHER WITH THE LETTERS!
emptied since my departure.
I groaned. It was obvious what had happened. I had
By the garage were a pair of rubbish bins. I approached
had known I was capable of doing. What a ridiculous
inside—at a mass of rubbish. In these bins the agency
thing to have done! My checks were gone, swallowed
emptied its trash; and in these bins, I was convinced,
up by the postal system.
were my checks. O my, what was I to do?
But wait—maybe they were retrievable. A leviathan
I could do the sensible thing and admit defeat. After
had swallowed them; but maybe I could descend into
all, the checks were replaceable. It would be tiresome
its belly and get them back. It was worth a try. Our
and embarrassing; but I could contact each client,
local post office is a small, friendly place. Conceivably,
explain my blunder, and ask for a new check.
they would take pity on me.
Or—the indignity be damned!—I could search through
Trying to stay calm, I returned to the post office and
the bins.
explained to a postal employee what had happened.
I decided to search.
Other employees gathered to listen, and to shake their
Taking a deep breath, I climbed into the bin and sank
heads at my blunder. Was there any way to get the
kneedeep in trash. The agency disposed of a large
checks back? I asked. I was told that a procedure did
quantity of computer printouts; and had it not been
exist for retrieving mail. I would have to fill out a form,
for the coffee grounds, pencil shavings, and snack
and pay a small charge, for each item returned to me.
remains mixed in, I might have enjoyed as a lark my
“Let’s go for it,” I said, trying to sound jocular.
descent into this binful of paper. But I persevered.
First we looked through the hampers in the back room.
Finding nothing in the first bin, I hopped out and
Plenty of mail, but no loose checks. Then we went
climbed into the second.
outside, opened the mailboxes, and checked their con
Incredibly, after a bit of digging, I found my checks.
tents. Still no checks.
They were among some contract forms and crushed
97 98
cups. I emerged from that bin knowing more than I
cared to about the underbelly of the carrental busi
ness. But I had my checks.
Without the Principles I would never have found them.
Your method is invaluable, for people like me when we
do something stupid! Much thanks.
Yours,
Larry
The above is a testimonial, which I appreciate. But
it is also a cautionary tale. For the truth is that Larry
was lucky. Let’s take a look at his case.
Yes, he emerged from the rubbish bin triumphantly 5.
clutching his checks. They were in there. But they
could just as easily have been under his car seat, This and
between the cushions, in the glove compartment,
or in one of his pockets. While he may have looked That
in these places, he does not seem to have looked
well. “I checked…I peered…I poked about,” he tells
us—describing a search that sounds to me cursory
and incomplete.
In other words, he should have begun with a metic
ulous search of his car. Instead, he took a Quick
Look, then succumbed to one Panicky Presump
tion after another. They’re in the mailbox! he cried
—no, the trash can!—no, the bin! That one of these
long shots happened to pan out does not justify his
failure to have eliminated first the more likely sites.
Descending into a rubbish bin must always remain
a last resort.
99
Some Quotes
Missing Luggage
101 102
How Not to Lose
The Last Place
Things
I had the following conversation with a dentist, as
he cleaned my teeth:
Some of us are prone to losing things. Friends laugh
DENTIST: Do you know where a lost object always is?
and say: “He’d lose his head if it weren’t nailed on.”
PROF. SOLOMON: Where?
Maybe that’s not such a bad idea.
DENTIST: In the last place you look.
To prevent pens from “walking away,” banks chain PROF. SOLOMON: You mean, the last place you’d think
them to the counter. And some men carry a wallet of looking?
that is chained to their belts. DENTIST: No, the last place you look. Because as soon
If your possessions tend to drift off, consider tying as you find it, you stop looking.
them down. PROF. SOLOMON: That’s pretty good. May I use it in
my book?
The man pictured below says he never loses any
DENTIST: Sure.
thing.
103 104
Key Beeper
A Consumer’s Guide Attached to your key ring, this device will beep
repeatedly in response to a clap—thus revealing
to Detection Devices the location of your keys. Unfortunately, any clap
will do; and a key beeper may go off unexpectedly.
Looking for a lostobject detection device? Consider
the following:
The Findometer
Larry Callahan (that artist who descended into a
rubbish bin) has designed the above contraption.
He claims that misplaced objects “disturb the energy
flow” of a room—a phenomenon that his machine
would be able to detect. The hand, he says, would
rotate in the direction of the disturbance.
How would the Findometer work? By applying mod
ern electronics to fang shui, the ancient Chinese art
of geomancy.
Sounds good.
105 106
Divining Rods
Knee Pads and Miner’s Lamp
Well diggers, prospectors, treasure hunters, and other These are for crawling about on your hands and
practitioners of “dowsing” swear by these. I find them knees, as you search for something.
unreliable. Still, they’re lightweight and easy to use.
Grip the horns firmly. Then just wander about until
you feel a twitch.
Divining rods have been around for thousands of
years. The Egyptians used them to foretell the
future; the Romans located precious metals with
them.
Traditionally, they are fashioned from the branch of But why are you crawling about? Go find a com
a hazel tree. A plastic version may be found in nov fortable chair, and apply the Principles!
elty shops.
The MOC
If you’ve dropped a small object containing iron,
you might want to try a MOC, or Magnetic Object
Collector. (It’s basically just a magnet.) Drag it about
the general area of your loss, until the MOC picks
up your object.
Can be attached to the family dog.
107 108
Grandma’s Principle
Alternative Methods
A friend in Ontario writes:
When my grandmother wanted to find something
There are methods besides my own for finding a lost that was lost, she would stop in the middle of the room
object (although none of them can rival the Twelve and ask herself out loud, “Now if I were a (whatever
Principles for efficacy, reliability, and ease of appli was lost), where would I go?” She’d muse on that one,
and proceed to wherever she decided the thing would
cation). You might want to try one of the following: have gone to—and there it was!
Hypnosis
Hand Tremblers
Members of the Navaho tribe consult a Hand Trem
bler. The quivering of his hands leads them to lost
objects.
Dreams
It is not unknown for the location of a missing
object to be revealed in a dream. So keep an eye out
Should be administered by a qualified professional.
even while asleep.
Memory Elixirs
109 110
Storefront Psychics
They will employ their mystic powers to locate
your object.
Saint Anthony
Our efforts to track down a lost object—by what
ever method—are sometimes doomed to failure.
When that happens, it may be time to turn to a
Higher Power.
Catholics have traditionally prayed to Saint
Anthony for the restoration of lost objects. A
promise is sometimes made that—in return for his
services—a donation will be made to the poor.
These donations are known as Saint Anthony’s
Bread.
Children chant the refrain:
Saint Anthony, please, come around
Something’s been lost and can’t be found.
Saint Anthony may also be called upon in cases of
lost faith, hope, or love.
111 112
Hashevat Aveida
The Talmud contains a set of laws regarding hashe
vat aveida, or the return of lost objects. Essentially,
a person is bound to return—or make a serious
attempt to return—any lost object he has found.
Nor may he accept a reward for this service.
There are, of course, exceptions and complications.
The duty is waived if the object’s owner can be ex
pected to have given up hope for its return. And one
must be sure the object was lost. If there are signs
of its having been deliberately left where found,
then the object must not be removed—since to do
so would cause its loss.
But the basic idea is that finders are not keepers—
in order that losers not be weepers.
This mitzvah (commandment, obligation, good deed)
has led to the establishment in Jewish communities
of special bulletin boards, on which people who
have lost or found something may put up notices.
One such bulletin board in Jerusalem is a city
block long!
114
A Zen Koan
Wannamoho
A monk had misplaced his rice bowl—somewhere I would like to conclude with a tale. It’s about Lone
in a dark room. He was groping about the room in Cloud, and how he learned that some lost objects
search of it, when the abbot of the monastery came should stay lost!
in and asked what he was doing. The monk ●
explained.
One day Lone Cloud got lost in the forest. On and on
“Why don’t you go outside and look for it?” said the he walked, sure that he would soon come upon a path.
abbot. “There’s more light out there.” But the forest grew denser, the shadows deeper. Now
and again rose the cry of the raven—an eerie sound in
this pathless place. And Lone Cloud began to feel anx
ious.
I’m truly lost, he thought.
Then the forest came to an end; and Lone Cloud found
himself descending into a valley. Only grass grew in
stream.
As he walked along, Lone Cloud was surprised by what
he saw scattered in the grass. For everywhere were arti
cles of daily life—bows, arrows, traps, pots, bowls, balls,
whistles, bracelets, cloaks, moccasins.
“Where am I?” he asked the wisest of creatures.
“In Wannamoho,” said the raven, “the Valley of Lost
Things. Strewn about you are the missing possessions
of your people.”
“Our missing possessions?”
“Yes. They have been coming here for countless gen
erations—ever since the first of your ancestors mislaid
something.”
“But how do they get here?”
115
116
“They are brought by the Wind That Laughs. The mo
fluttered down to the grass. Lone Cloud came running
ment something is given up for lost, he laughs—and
over—and there was his lost pouch.
wafts it to this valley.”
“Aha!” he cried, grabbing it up. He opened it and
Lone Cloud—who had never heard of Wannamoho—
beheld his pipe and tobacco. Amazingly, the tobacco
gazed about in wonder. The Valley of Lost Things! And
was still pungent.
he recalled a pouch he had lost years before. Richly
Pleased to have regained his pouch, Lone Cloud
embroidered, it had contained a fine pipe and powerful
departed from the valley and wandered the forest. At
tobacco. How precious that pouch had been to him,
last he came upon a path, and by dusk was back at his
and how he would like it back!
hut.
“The pouch I mislaid—it is here in this valley?”
That night he filled the pipe and smoked it. And he
“It is.”
was puffing away and murmuring pleasurably and
thinking that this indeed was how to spend his eve
“Show me where. I shall retrieve it and take it back
nings (and maybe his days, too)—when his hut col
with me.”
lapsed about him!
“I wouldn’t do that. Your pouch belongs now in Wan
Dazed, Lone Cloud crawled out of the ruins. And he
namoho. To remove it could bring bad luck upon
wondered: Could this be that bad luck of which the
you.”
raven had warned?
“Nonsense,” said Lone Cloud. And he insisted the
The next day Lone Cloud was gathering nuts—when
raven lead him to his pouch.
the ground opened and he plunged into a bear trap!
So the raven flew into the air, circled about, and
Bruised and abashed, he climbed out. More bad luck?
117 118
And the next day he woke up itching. A rash covered
his body—poison ivy.
“It is as the raven said,” lamented Lone Cloud. “He
warned me that reclaiming my pouch might bring bad
luck. And so it has.”
Lone Cloud searched until he found the raven, perched
in an oak. “You were right,” he said. “I have brought
bad luck upon myself. Tell me what I must do to get
rid of it.”
“The pouch must go back to Wannamoho,” said the
raven. “Only then will this bad luck leave you.”
So Lone Cloud roamed the forest, looking for the Val
ley of Lost Things. He wanted to return the pouch to
where he had found it. But try as he might, he could
not locate that strange valley.
“I could use some help,” said the beaver. “Come, lend
“What am I to do?” he groaned. “Until this pouch is
me a hand.”
back in Wannamoho, misfortune will hound me.”
So Lone Cloud put down his pouch and joined the
Returning to the ruins of his hut, he found the raven
beaver. All day they labored together—felling trees,
perched there. “Wisest of creatures,” said Lone Cloud,
dragging them to the river, and building a dam. The
“I looked and looked, but could not find Wannamo
work was strenuous, and Lone Cloud wanted to quit.
ho.”
But he was determined to do as the raven had advised.
“It is hard to find.”
Finally, the beaver thanked him and swam off. Lone
Cloud sighed with relief. He was tired and hungry; it
could take it back for me?” said Lone Cloud, holding
pouch.
out the pouch.
But where was it? He had left it by the river—but
“O no,” said the raven.
where exactly he couldn’t recall.
“Then what am I to do?”
“Where’s that pouch?” cried Lone Cloud.
“Go help the beaver.”
Up and down the river he searched for it. He seemed
along the river until he found the beaver, who was
bush? For a long time he searched, but without success.
dragging a tree into the water.
Finally he gave up, plopped to the ground, and sat there
“Let me help you,” he said to the most industrious of
frowning. A wind rustled in the trees.
creatures.
But then his frown dissolved, and a gleam entered his
119 120
eye. For he realized he had lost the pouch again.
And that meant it was back in Wannamoho.
Lone Cloud jumped for joy, glad to be free of the ill
A Final Word
luck that had plagued him.
I hope this book has taught you how to locate what
you lose.
If it has, enter your name on the certificate. You are
now a Finder, not a Loser. You are a master of the
right way—the effective way—to search for lost
objects.
Remember, lost objects can be found. They want
to be found. And they will be found—by SYSTEMATIC
SEARCHERS.
Searchers for whom finding things is not a chore,
but a challenge.
Searchers who—instead of ransacking their own
house—sit down, don their thinking cap, take a sip
of tea, halfclose their eyes, and murmur:
“All right, the game’s afoot!”
Searchers like yourself.
121 122
Certi
ficate of Proficiency
This is to Certify that
Professor Solomon
Also by Professor Solomon:
“How to Make the Most of a Flying
Saucer Experience” Also by Professor Solomon:
A comprehensive and entertaining guide to UFOs.
Includes tales of contactees, facts about the Space People, “Coney Island”
and numerous illustrations. Plus, Professor Solomon’s tips— A history and profile of the legendary amusement area
for making the most of a flying saucer experience!
To download a free copy of this book, go to:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/cibookpage.html
To download a free copy of this book, go to:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/ufobookpage.html
“Japan in a Nutshell ”
by Professor Solomon
“ The Book of King Solomon ”
At last, the unknown Japan. The traditional Japan. The A life of King Solomon, written by his court historian!
real Japan. In this erudite yet entertaining work, the Translated and Annotated by Professor Solomon
Professor explores a Japan of which few of us are aware. An engaging book—highly recommended to anyone wanting
For a tour of a unique culture—a fascinating look at its to learn more about “the wisest of men,” his place in history,
diverse ways and wonders—join him. and his relevance today.
To download a free copy of this book, go to:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/kingsolomonpage.html
To download a free copy of this book, go to:
http://www.professorsolomon.com/japanbookpage.html